Libby Emmons and Charlie Kirk Discuss WPATH’s Updated Guidelines
Fresh surgical incisions were visible on the young patient’s chest as she stood with her Hawaiian shirt opened and unbuttoned, under a sign that reads: “be yourself.”
A young patient, a biological girl, could be seen smiling while posing with her doctor, a woman who appears to be her mother, and a fluffy dog after having undergone a double mastectomy for the purposes of treating gender dysphoria.
Fresh surgical incisions were visible on the young patient’s chest as she stood with her Hawaiian shirt opened and unbuttoned, under a sign that reads: “be yourself.”
The doctor who performed the surgery, Dr. Sidhbh Gallagher, posted a congratulations to her mutilated patient on Instagram. Gallagher is a Miami-based plastic surgeon who specializes in what she called “yeeting the teets,” or performing double mastectomies of women and girls’ healthy breasts for the purpose of gender affirmation.
Gallagher has performed hundreds of breast removals on biological women for the purposes of gender affirmation, and has treated patients who are only 13-years-old. Her practice is in Miami Beach, Florida.
“Be yourself.” pic.twitter.com/IdzY4lK7K6
— 𝐆𝐫𝐞𝐠 🏳️🌈 (@CasuallyGreg) September 3, 2022
During one week in 2020, she performed 22 double mastectomies.
Gallagher addresses performing double mastectomies on healthy minor girls, saying: “We are happy to offer top surgery to minors with consent of parents and the recommendation of the patient’s mental health professional.”
Dr Sidhbh Gallagher celebrates performing double mastectomies on healthy breasts for the purposes of treating gender dysphoria. pic.twitter.com/W17Q3m8xiA
— libby emmons (@libbyemmons) September 3, 2022
There have been questions of whether or not minors could actually give informed consent for the removal of their reproductive materials, such as breasts, uterus, ovaries, etc., given that their brains are not fully formed, and they do not fully understand the human urge toward reproduction, or have a real sense of how they might feel in the future.
— libby emmons (@libbyemmons) September 3, 2022
By Libby Emmons